MedaglionePalazzoTartara18 Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date October 14, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsEthicsMedicine Tagged , bioethics, Canada, Charles Camosy, consensus, doctors, George W. Bush, human life, Journal of Medical Ethics, lawyers, Leon Kass, medical ethics, moral tradition, Ontario, orthodoxy, patient choice, Paul Ramsey, philosophers, President’s Council on Bioethics, professors, progressive politics, public health, public policy, The Emerging Tradition of Secular Bioethics, tradition Contrary to Claims, Bioethics Is Not a “Moral Tradition” Wesley J. Smith October 14, 2025 Bioethics, Ethics, Medicine 5 Talk about a “heads we win, tails you lose” consensus that can drive Hippocratic physicians out of the profession. Read More ›
Galileo Facing the Roman Inquisition Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date October 8, 2020 CategoriesFaith & ScienceHistory of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , anti-science, Christianity, conflict myth, Franciscan University of Steubenville, Galileo Affair, Galileo Galilei, science and religion, Seattle, superstition, tradition Logan Paul Gage: “Our Galileo Complex” David Klinghoffer October 8, 2020 Faith & Science, History of Science, Scientific Reasoning 3 How did science, of all things, come to be a vehicle for virtue signaling, a virtual religion, with insiders and outsiders, the damned and the saved? Read More ›
Marvin Olasky Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 11, 2018 CategoriesBioethicsIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, anthropology, Discovery Institute, economics, homelessness, intelligent design, Marvin Olasky, mental illness, poverty, progressive, Seattle, Thomas Sowell, tradition, virtue-signaling, World Magazine Olasky at Discovery Institute: Intelligent Design and the Anthropology of Homelessness David Klinghoffer September 11, 2018 Bioethics, Intelligent Design 2 What’s the pivot that turns us toward more traditional solutions, versus the wrongly named “progressive” ones? Read More ›